By .
The
massive defeat suffered by the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) in the
recently held governorship elections in Edo State has become a wake-up
call for major stakeholders in the party who are desirous of charting
the way forward, reports Remi Adelowo
In
spite of the public show-off displayed by leaders of the Peoples
Democratic Party in the run down to the last governorship election,
boasting that Governor Adams Oshiomhole would be shown the exit from
office, not a few of them knew that securing victory at the polls was
akin to achieving almost the impossible.
But
against earlier permutations that the PDP could spring surprises in the
state, the party not only lost in areas believed to be stronghold of
its notable leaders, it also lost in the entire 18 local government
areas of the state to the rival Action Congress of Nigeria (ACN).
With
the victor, Oshiomhole and his supporters, still savouring success, and
the loser, Major Gen. Charles Airhiavbere, with his backers quietly
licking their wounds, major stakeholders of the PDP, The Nation reliably
gathered, have, in the last two weeks, engaged in informal discussions
on the way forward for the party.
For
fear of being consigned into political obscurity in the next four years
and even beyond, a source disclosed that few days after the election,
some leaders of the PDP in Edo State met at the Abuja residence of Chief
Mike Oghiadome, the Chief of Staff to President Goodluck Jonathan, to
discuss a range of issues affecting the party.
Others
at the parley included elected PDP members at the state and National
Assembly, most notably a former Speaker, Edo House of Assembly, now a
member of the House of Representatives and an influential financier of
the party, Hon. Friday Itulah, who decamped to the party a few months to
the election.
Top
on the agenda at the session was an appraisal of the process leading to
the choice of Airhiavbere as the party’s candidate; strategies deployed
for the campaign and its shortcomings and the negative public image and
roles of certain leaders which allegedly contributed to the failure of
the party at the polls.
As
regards the candidature of Airhiavbere, the session, according to
sources privy to it, regretted that the retired Major General was no
match for Oshiomhole at the polls.
According
to the source, “one issue that kept cropping up was that the party’s
candidate was a hard sell. There was also a unanimous opinion that the
PDP primaries, which produced Airhiavbere, was not transparent enough.
“For
instance, a question was asked about how long Airhiavbere has been in
the party to have defeated established members like the former governor
of the state, Professor Osarinheme Osunbor and Professor Julius
Ihonvbere, both of whom, some party members believe, could have given
Oshiomhole a good fight at the polls.”
Osunbor
and Ihonvbere, it would be recalled, never hid their disenchantment of
how they were ‘rigged out’ at the primaries. Ihonvbere later decamped to
ACN and campaigned vigorously for Oshiomhole, while Osunbor, though
still formally in PDP, tacitly endorsed the governor for a second term
in office.
Another
issue that engaged the attention of those at the meeting was the
negative perception of the party and some of its leaders.
The
source added, many leaders at the meeting were afraid to talk about
this issue, but a few summoned the courage to allege that the image of
the old leaders, like Chief Anthony Anenih and his contemporaries, was
doing more harm than good to the party.
At
the end of it all, it was resolved that there was an urgent need to
rebrand the party with a new set of leaders that would be saddled with
the responsibility of repositioning the party for the challenges ahead.
“PDP may go into extinction in Edo State if nothing is done as quickly
as possible,” a source quoted one of those at the meeting as saying.
In
the interim, The Nation gathered that Oghiadome was endorsed as the new
leader of the party in the state, being the most senior figure of PDP
at the seat of power.
His
choice, findings revealed, is seen as strategic. He not only has the
ears of the president, he is also seen as an uncontroversial figure that
has all it takes to pull the party together at this critical time.
Oghiadome
and the president have indeed come a long way. Their closeness began
when they both served as Deputy Governors of Edo and Bayelsa States
respectively about ten years ago.
What
remains to be seen, however, is whether Anenih, the political godfather
in Edo State, will give way for younger elements clamouring for a
change.
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